Brad Abrams | Champion of the Obvious

CAT | Personal

Aug/10

11

My Day in the Chair

Today I will spend about 360 minutes or about 6 hours in the chair.   They are taking blood out of my left arm, pushing it through a apheresis machine and putting in back in my right arm. The machine uses a centrifuge to separate out the red blood cells, plasma and white blood cells.  They are grabbing some of the white blood cells that contain stem cells and putting them in a bag.  In my time in the chair the complete volume of my blood will flow through the machine three times.

I am donating for the National Bone Marrow Donors Program. I know very little about the recipient.  She is 44 years old, could be living anywhere in the world, and has a rare form of leukemia.  Without a transplant, she will die.

Over the last 5 days, I have come in each morning to get a shot of filgrastim that has greatly raised my stem cell count and caused minor headaches and bone aches in the process.  In the same time, the recipient has been getting a massive dose of chemo and radiation to hopefully completely kill off her cancer.  Being a crude, imprecise tool that it is, it has also killed off all her bone marrow.  By this time her body has lost its ability to produce blood cells.  She is living off whole blood donations, but those cells die off in matter of days.   A medical courier is standing by ready to fly my stem cells to her, where they will hopefully begin to re-grow bone marrow in her, which will produce the blood cells she needs in order to live.

This all started years ago.. when I was in high-school.  I gave blood for the Red Cross mostly to impress girls.  One time I checked a box to join the National Bone Marrow Donors Program having no real idea what that meant.  Nearly 18 years later, they called me and said I was a possible match.   Only about 1 in 100 folks who are a possible matches turn out to be close enough to actually donate.  So I went to the local blood bank and they took a few vials of blood to do further testing.  I didn’t think about it for weeks.  Then I got the call…  I was a perfect match!  They did a complete physical to ensure I was healthy enough to donate and it would be safe for her.

I have not often prayed specifically for someone I do not know, but my thoughts have been with her these last few weeks.  I don’t know if she is a mom, an aunt, a sister-in-law.  But I bet she has a wedding, graduation, or birthday to go to.  With this treatment she has a 40% chance of living.  Not fantastic odds, but way better than her chances without it.

Some donors are able to find a match among family, but even though you may have a lot in common with your brother, there is no guarantee that the specific six factors that affect marrow rejection will be among them.  That is where the National Bone Marrow Donors Program comes in.  They find matches anywhere in the world.  But of course only among those in the registry.

Please consider joining!

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May/10

3

Going Google

“Going Google” is the phrase companies use when they choose to move over to Google Apps for some of their IT needs.  I will be "going Google" on a more personal level — I have accepted a position in Product Management at Google! We are still working on the details of exactly what I will be working on but it will be something in cloud/web development space and I will be based here in Kirkland/Seattle.

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Why did I make this transition?

I needed a change personally, to learn something new, see the tech world from a fresh perspective. And what better place than Google! As I look at where things are going in the industry (and where I think they should go), it is clear that the web, and cloud+devices specifically, are the dominant trends of the future. Working at Google will give me an opportunity to have a deep and meaningful impact on that future.

Google has benefited more than any other company from the rapid growth of the web and as such they have a responsibility to help the web grow to the next level. I am excited to see what that will look like: from the ubiquity of the rich web with HTML5 to the maturing of the cloud as an integral part of every company’s IT portfolio to open, powerful personal devices to help us navigate it all anywhere. I am excited to work at Google to help make the future arrive sooner ;-)

As far as exactly what I will do – I don’t know yet. But I have a huge passion for building and releasing software and love the developer space. I am super excited that my first week at Google will be spent at Google I/O. This conference has been sold out for weeks, so I guess the only way you can attend now is to join Google ;-) .  If you are going, I’d love to connect.  I clearly have a lot to learn! 

This is obviously a HUGE change for me and I’d love to hear any advice or thoughts you have as I make the transition to being a Noogler (a new Google employee).

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